Paris is one of the most visited cities in the world — and one of the richest for unusual, character-filled accommodation. Beyond the standard hotel room, Paris hides an extraordinary collection of quirky Airbnbs and short-term rentals that turn a stay into an experience in itself: a houseboat on the Seine, a converted artist’s atelier in Montmartre, an Art Nouveau apartment with original 1900s fittings, a treehouse in the Bois de Boulogne. Here’s our guide to the most unusual short-term rentals in Paris.

Why Choose an Unusual Airbnb in Paris?

Paris already has everything — museums, gastronomy, architecture, culture. But where you sleep shapes how you experience a city. Staying on a houseboat on the Seine, you wake up to the sound of water and the Eiffel Tower at eye level. Sleeping in a Haussmann apartment with original parquet floors, you inhabit history rather than observe it. The accommodation becomes part of the story.

The Most Unusual Short-Term Rentals in Paris

Houseboats on the Seine

Paris has over 200 inhabited houseboats (péniches) moored along the Seine, and some of the most charming are available for short-term rental. The most sought-after moorings are between Île Saint-Louis and the 16th arrondissement — with views of Notre-Dame, the Eiffel Tower, or the Pont de l’Alma. Mornings on a péniche are something else: coffee with the river at your feet, barges passing slowly, the Paris skyline at water level.

Montmartre Artist Ateliers

Montmartre has been Paris’s artistic heart since the 19th century — Picasso, Modigliani, Van Gogh all worked here. Several former artists’ studios (ateliers) have been converted into remarkable living spaces: high ceilings flooded with north-facing light, exposed beams, mezzanines, and that specific atmosphere of a space made for creation. Staying in a Montmartre atelier is staying inside a layer of Parisian history most tourists never touch.

Waking up in an artist’s atelier in Montmartre — the silence, the light, the creaking parquet — puts you in a different relationship with the city. These experiences that shift your perspective and create unexpected connections are exactly what Kairos designs intentionally — creative immersions, in small groups, that change the way you see.

Art Nouveau Apartments in the 16th and 7th

Paris has some of the finest Art Nouveau residential architecture in the world — original 1900s ironwork, ceramic tile floors, carved wood paneling, ornate fireplaces. Several of these apartments are available through Airbnb and high-end rental platforms. Staying in one is like inhabiting a living museum of Belle Époque Paris.

The Treehouse at the Bois de Boulogne

On the western edge of Paris, the Bois de Boulogne hides a handful of unusual accommodations including a genuine treehouse — accessible by a rope bridge, surrounded by forest, with a wood-burning stove and views over the canopy. Ten minutes from the Arc de Triomphe. Completely unexpected.

Converted Spaces: Former Workshops, Lofts, and Chapels

Paris has a remarkable stock of converted spaces available for short-term rental: former industrial workshops in the 11th and 20th, loft apartments in Belleville, even a converted chapel in the Marais. These spaces combine the architectural bones of Paris’s working past with contemporary design sensibility.

How to Find Unusual Accommodation in Paris

  • Airbnb: search by « unique stays » — houseboats, treehouses, castles and unusual homes
  • Misterb&b, Plum Guide, Vrbo: curated selection of character apartments
  • Paris je t’aime (official Paris tourism website): lists of unusual accommodation by category
  • Houseboat-specific platforms: Houseboatholidays.com, Barging in France

Practical Tips for Short-Term Rentals in Paris

  • Book early: the most unusual properties are in high demand, especially May-September and during Fashion Week
  • Check arrondissement carefully: Paris’s 20 arrondissements are very different in character. The Marais (3rd/4th) for culture and nightlife; Montmartre (18th) for village atmosphere; Saint-Germain (6th) for literary Paris.
  • Tourist tax: Paris charges a tourist tax per person per night (€0.65-€14.95 depending on accommodation category)
  • Transport: Metro is exceptional — almost anywhere in Paris is within 10 minutes of a station

Paris: The City That Never Stops Surprising

Paris has been surprising visitors for centuries — and it hasn’t stopped. Behind the famous landmarks lies a city of hidden courtyards, secret gardens, bookshops that smell of aged paper, and houseboats where someone makes excellent coffee. The best Paris experiences are the ones that feel like discoveries. Your accommodation should be one of them.

If transformative, unexpected experiences are what you’re looking for, explore Kairos — high-altitude expeditions, creative immersions in music and painting, in exclusive small groups. For those who want experiences that genuinely change something.